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Businesses The Almighty Buck

Amazon Will Raise Its Minimum Wage To $15 For All 350,000 US Workers (recode.net) 327

Amazon said Tuesday it's raising the minimum wage for all 350,000 of its U.S. employees to $15, effective next month. From a report: The new pay threshold will go into effect Nov. 1 and impact all full-time, temporary and seasonal workers across the company's U.S. warehouse and customer service teams as well as Whole Foods, the company said in a blog post. It did not disclose what its current minimum pay wage is for U.S. workers, perhaps in part because there is not one set rate. "We listened to our critics, thought hard about what we wanted to do, and decided we want to lead," Amazon founder and CEO Jeff Bezos said in a statement. "We're excited about this change and encourage our competitors and other large employers to join us." Alongside the cash compensation bump, Amazon said it will eventually eliminate its practice of granting stock to these workers and will instead institute a program that allows them to purchase Amazon stock through the company. The announcement comes as Amazon faces increased criticism over its pay and treatment of warehouse workers. Senator Bernie Sanders, in particular, has been relentless in his criticism of Amazon over the last few months, proposing a bill that would tax the company as a penalty for having workers who need food stamps and other public assistance to make ends meet.
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Amazon Will Raise Its Minimum Wage To $15 For All 350,000 US Workers

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  • by Errol backfiring ( 1280012 ) on Tuesday October 02, 2018 @09:15AM (#57410412) Journal

    ... for having workers who need food stamps and other public assistance to make ends meet.

    So, in effect, nothing has changed in 300 years. This is work ethics from the steam age.

    • Ford and the Fed (Score:4, Interesting)

      by harvey the nerd ( 582806 ) on Tuesday October 02, 2018 @09:55AM (#57410720)
      The $15 wage floor is slightly reminescent of Henry Ford's "$5 day" policy, which bought Ford labor peace and productivity for a few years. Soon enough, others were able to match or exceed Ford's labor rates. Some of it was fueled by productivity and sales, but a lot of it represented more rapid expansion of M2 by banks and the Fed in the 1910s. Forbes on Ford's $5 day [forbes.com] NPR [npr.org]

      The frightening aspect is price inflation that has already occurred and will accompany a broader application like a $15 minimum wage. Such a tremendous rising wage is a symptom of expansion of credit and money.printing, courtesy of the Federal Reserve since 2008.
      • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Tuesday October 02, 2018 @10:29AM (#57411000)
        price inflation isn't an issue. And productivity has doubled in the last 20 years and continues to climb (thanks to computers, better software and automation).

        If anything we need shorter work weeks and higher pay to absorb job losses due to increased productivity. At my job it's been the same 3 man team for 15 years (with folks coming and going here and there) and our user base continues to increase. We haven't had to hire more because the software keeps improving so there's less to break, keeping the amount of work pretty consistent even as the number of users we support climbs.
        • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

          And productivity has doubled in the last 20 years

          In America, productivity has gone up about 30% in the last 20 years.

          ... and continues to climb

          In America, productivity growth has been mostly stagnant since 2004 [bls.gov].

          If anything we need shorter work weeks and higher pay to absorb job losses due to increased productivity.

          There is little historical evidence that increased productivity causes job losses. There is much more evidence for the opposite, and productivity improvements are more often than not correlated with rising labor force participation rates.

          As workers become more productive, it is more profitable to employ them, so demand for labor goes UP, not down.

          Countries with low produc

          • you'll see the doubling. If you look at overall stats the service economy makes it hard to measure, leading to lower figures.

            And we most certainly have had technology unemployment in the past. The Luddites weren't just overly conservative, they were losing their livelihoods. We produce twice as much with 2/3rds the workforce.

            When there are new jobs they're low paying service sector jobs. But the trouble there is there's less money in the economy, so less money floating around and an overall slowdown
      • Re:Ford and the Fed (Score:5, Interesting)

        by bkmoore ( 1910118 ) on Tuesday October 02, 2018 @10:35AM (#57411056)
        $5 for an eight hour shift in 1914 dollars would be $123.26 in 2018. $15 times 8 hours is $120. Ford in 1914 paid better than Amazon in 2018.
        • They had 10-11 hour shifts back then.

          • They had 10-11 hour shifts back then.

            The standard shift was nine hours in 1914 and probably included a break at some point. Originally the daily wage was $2.50 for a nine hour shift. Ford had to hire 52,000 men (there were no women back then) to maintain a staffing level of 14,000 in the production plant. The high rate of turnover was causing very serious production problems and costing Ford a lot more money than doubling the wages would. Ford doubled the wage to $5, reduced turnover and saved a lot of money.

            • Re:Ford and the Fed (Score:5, Interesting)

              by Muros ( 1167213 ) on Tuesday October 02, 2018 @11:04AM (#57411246)

              A different way to calculate the value of $5 in 1915 would be to compare it to house prices. A 48 week year of 5 days a week at $5 would net you $1200, and house prices were ~$3200. So Ford paid around 37.5% the median house price per year. Current median US house price is roughly $200k, so if Bezos wants to deserve a comparison to Ford he needs to up wages to about $39 an hour.

              • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

                The median house in America today is more than twice the size it was in 1914. If you calculate by square foot of housing, wages today are about the same.

                But housing prices have climbed faster than general inflation for most of the last century, so it is not a good benchmark for comparing wages.

              • Re:Ford and the Fed (Score:5, Interesting)

                by Lost Race ( 681080 ) on Tuesday October 02, 2018 @07:07PM (#57414548)

                Current median US house price is roughly $200k, so if Bezos wants to deserve a comparison to Ford he needs to up wages to about $39 an hour.

                In 1915, $5 would buy a quarter ounce of gold. To keep up with Ford, Bezos would have to pay ... 1/32 oz/hour ... $1200/oz ... $37.50 an hour. I'd say your math checks out!

              • House prices these days are based on two incomes per household, in 1915 that would have been 1 income/household. House prices have been climbing faster than inflation for a long time.

        • Ford had 9 hour shifts, but I would tend to agree Ford was much better relative to other workers in 1914, never mind the multiple CPI series, politicized stats.
        • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • Re:Ford and the Fed (Score:5, Interesting)

        by gtall ( 79522 ) on Tuesday October 02, 2018 @10:36AM (#57411068)

        Not only the Fed, Congress and our alleged Presidents went along with massive reductions in tax receipts and massive increases in spending. Inflation will really bite because to tame it will require the Fed raise interest rates. In a year or so, the U.S. will spend more every year on servicing its debt than it spends on the military.

        Now, let us all bow our heads in remembrance of those solemn vows Republicans gave us that the tax cut will pay for itself in the hopes we fail to notice the deficit going to over a Trillion dollars every year. Remember also that Trump once claimed he was the kind of debt. Also remember that he destroys all that he touches.

    • I'm not saying we should have to pay to keep Amazon's employees fed, but it's better than the alternatives.

      Still, this is great news. The public shaming (mostly from Bernie Sanders) worked. It worked for Disney too.
    • by lgw ( 121541 )

      Would you outlaw jobs for teenagers? It's already vastly harder to get a teenage shit job than it was in my day,

      There's a place in the market for shit jobs for peolpe still living at home, going to school, and looking for both pocket money and learning how to work any job (show up on time, sober and well groomed - you'd be amazed). It's bad when adults find themselves working such jobs, but if you have no skills at all, you have to start somewhere.

      Amazon warehouse jobs are a tier above that, and it makes

      • by sjames ( 1099 )

        If raising the minimum wage would effectively outlaw part time warehouse work at Amazon, how do you explain Amazon voluntarily increasing to $15/hr? Looks like it isn't so impossible after all.

        And if it's not actually impossible, then nothing is "effectively outlawed" at all.

        I'm reminded of an interview with a sandwich shop owner in N.Y. city complaining bitterly that with unemployment going down he has to be nice to his employees and even, God forbid, make sandwiches himself sometimes.

        • by lgw ( 121541 )

          If raising the minimum wage would effectively outlaw part time warehouse work at Amazon, how do you explain Amazon voluntarily increasing to $15/hr?

          I never made any such claim. But demanding that all Amazon workers are paid enough where they don't need food stamps? Hows that going to work for people who work 24 hours a week? 12 Hours a week?

  • by JackieBrown ( 987087 ) on Tuesday October 02, 2018 @09:16AM (#57410428)

    Doing something like this across the board makes no sense since so many locations have completely different costs of living.

    Some areas, this will be so over paid that it will cause prices to rise as other companies start having to match the wages.

    In other areas, 15 is not even close to meeting a living wage that it will do nothing to help.

    • $15/hr is overpaid in what context?

      • Ever been to Goliad, TX?
        • Yeah, I'd say most of Texas outside of some of the major cities.

          In fact, in San Antonio 30,000 is enough for a single person to get by comfortably. (May not at the comfort level a lot of the higher middle class that a lot of Slashdot users live at.)

          I was making $46 thousand and was the sole provider for my family of 4. Cooking your own meals and not going out for lunch makes a huge difference in a budget.

    • by jellomizer ( 103300 ) on Tuesday October 02, 2018 @09:53AM (#57410700)

      So people who live in a populated area, with a lot of job opportunity (high price areas) will move from living in abject poverty to just poverty.
      The people who live in a less populated area, with little other job opportunities (low price areas) can now have a comfortable life style.

      Perhaps there should be more effort in finding way to lower cost of living in Cities, vs. finding ways to improve property costs (AKA raising the cost of living)

      • Warehouses are all located just outside cities. About the same distance, because they are logistic centers. They need to be close to the places the ship to (and next to major truck routes), and where land is cheaper.

    • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Tuesday October 02, 2018 @10:02AM (#57410782)
      in response to wage gains if there aren't matching productivity gains. We've doubled productivity in the last 20 years while wages remained the same or went down. There is a _lot_ of room for wage growth and better standards of living in America.

      If I may rant a bit here, I do wish we could get rid of this pernicious lie that raising wages is pointless because it just means prices will go up. It's so obviously wrong on the face of it. If such a thing were true we'd never have gotten out of the gilded age.
    • I don't why there is always so much hand wringing over giving people in the sticks half-decent jobs. Wealthy vacationers are going to do much more harm than these jobs.
  • As for Bernie Sanders bill, he may have had Amazon in mind but the bill remains a good idea. It makes the companies which are systematically subsidizing with tax funds reconcile the bill instead of asking taxpayers to do so.
  • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Tuesday October 02, 2018 @09:22AM (#57410462)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Amazon is facing lawmakers wrath unless they do something,
    This is a pre-emptively action, that is to avoid this.
    Diverting 0.0x% of their profit to their actual workers is not an actual cost
    They are trying to look good in front of the growing critics.
    If 15$ is a living wage, remains to be discussed.
    For people citing inflation, please consider that
    McDonalds in for instance Denmark are able to pay workers an ok salary + 5 weeks of vacation,
    while Big Mac prices are not that much higher than the US
    Yes
  • by GregMmm ( 5115215 ) on Tuesday October 02, 2018 @09:49AM (#57410672)

    Why lead and suggest other companies go to $15 for their minimum pay? At this time they will be paying a premium for workers. This is just good business. They will retain workers better, and attract better workers. Turns out if you pay more you get to pick from more applicants with better skills.

    So why would you want your competition to meet the same pay? I suppose this is simply a political move. Looks good if you go first. Unfortunately, in the business world this will be forgotten by next Monday.

    Not sure what the impact will be about the stock grants their losing. Maybe they will give a discounted stock purchase plan, which might compensate the lost income. Also, you don't need to hold the stock grants till they mature, usually like 4 years for all of the grant.

  • And apparently $15/hr is $31,200/year. A lot of cars on the road has MSRP more than that..
    • it's workers can't afford the goods they're making. An entry level 4 door sedan that's not a death mobile like the Sentra retails for $17k. I've got a 4 year old one and they're kind of junky on the inside but they do well in crashes (which the Versa does not). That's $300/mo (after taxes and the like) + $100 for insurance (more if you've had an accident recently). Plus at $15/hr you need to come up with 1.75 month's pay for a downpayment.

      Yeah, you can buy used, but the price of used cars keeps going up
  • by WillAffleckUW ( 858324 ) on Tuesday October 02, 2018 @12:02PM (#57411688) Homepage Journal

    Talk about being behind the curve, Amazon.

  • Over the last 12-18 months, finding people to work a bit above minimum wage (due to the fact that we receive federal aid for those jobs, we can't post them any higher) has been increasingly difficult. We recently posted one for basic grunt work and got only 3 applicants and I keep passing McDonalds locations that have signs up at $15-18/h for shift managers.

    Economic growth is exploding, the lowest unemployment in decades drives wages up. NYS is increasing minimum wages to $11.15 next year but nobody even wa

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